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Chicago examiner vol xi no 80 a m tuesday Chicago march 25 1913 ti jfsday registered in pricf onf cfnt delivered ty carrier 350 dead in tornado property loss 15,000,000 15,000,000 225 dead 500 injured 5,000 homeless in omaha 9 states swept rescuers at work all night stillsearch ruins for bodies homes of rich demolished jthree and one-half mile strip through heart of city and seven blocks wide is razed before tornado leaps river to council bluffs iowa hundreds are saved from death by easter parade omaha neb march 24 â€” omaha chief city of nebraska lies prostrate under the spent force of the worst tornado in the history of the middle west roaring down suddenly upon the city shortly after 6 o-'clock last night the storm cut a path seven blocks wide and three and one-halt miles long through the heart of the residential district a total of 225 dead and at least 500 injured were left in the wreck-strewn path many of the injured it is feared are fatallv hurt a one hundred and fifty-two bodies have already been recovered and search of the rums i s still going on the property loss is estimated at sf 0,000.000 twelve hundred houses were wrecked in addition to five public schools and seven churches at the moment that the storm struck every light in the city was extinguished fires started all over the destroyed section torren tial rains came immediately and reduced this danger to a minimum panic ensued a trolley car with fifteen passengers was lifted from the rails and several persons injured the wind picked up the motdrmafi and set him down 200 feet awav at the child's saving institute a baby was pulled out of a window by the wind and dashed to death a quarter of a mile awav two little girls blown from the house of morris christensen were found three blocks away dead another baby was torn from the arms of its father c w walsh after the storm it was found in the lee of a broken roof uninjured order restored by troops mayor dahlman took personal command of the situation and called out all the available state troops appealing at the same time to governor moorhead for reinforcements before the roar of the tornado had died out in the distance the work of rescue had begun it continued uninterruptedly by lantern light all through the night and with the arrival to-day of the governor with additional state troops supplemented by the federal troops from fort omaha order is being rapidly restored and accurate accounting made of the extent of the damage the situation is appalling but it is believed that the authorities now have it well in hand and there remains but the work of locating all of the dead caring for the injured and clearing away the wreck age preparatory to building a committee of fifty prominent citizens is in charge of rescue work but the death list is steadily mounting as bodies are recovered the workers are federal and state stroops policemen firemen and a picked corps of volunteers the death roll will not be complete until at least another twenty four hours has passed several days probably will be required to gather the tragic details from the small towns and villages that were in the path of the tornado in iowa and nebraska more than 5,000 homeless to-night 5,000 men women and children are homeless they are being cared for in hotels and in private homes that were thrown open even before mayor dahlman issued his appeal to the citizenry to care for the stricken residence sections alone suffered the greatest loss was in a section of moderate priced homes the business heart of the city escaped entirely the tornado traveled in a northeasterly direction and first swept down on ralston a manufcaturing suburb three miles west of south omaha great beautiful homes were in a twinkling converted into dis mantled torn and wrecked nothings from the entrance of the storm into bemis park it appeared to have broadened its scope in kountze place the scene of devastation equalled that in any other â– listrict biriney street recognized as one of the prettiest thorough tares in omaha from the boulevard east to sherman avenue is ren dered impassible it struck the chx uffllts f ogjftfe at tie ejgld jaub lo the bÂ£utlrwert m * 1 council orders inquiry into gas war to end peril to lives investigation of fight between peoples company and con sumers league to follow the blowing out of regulators ericsschi is exonerated in theater collapse and plan is made to consolidate the municipal and city library branch what the council did yes terday ordered an investigation of the war between the peoples gas company anil the gas consumers league and of sudden high pressure on gag pipes bandar destroying many davioes for ving gas and endangering lives and pissed majority report of the build tpg committee on the collapse of the leaf of the home theater and rebuked alderman charles 51 thomson reject ing his minority report by a vote of hi to 19 eefhsed to censure build tag commissioner ericsson mayors park consolidation bill amend ec t adjust revenues and cant to the fcsritfijipi t,aw would ve 5417.580 i4uaoÂ«uy &> aia*iÂ«o tuoue omÂ«r combining the municipal li tmhp and the civics department of the ptjbuc library introduced by alderman long and sent to the finance commit tee alderman besfusÃŸ introduced and bad rased an ordinance strengthening the ry*b petition in preventing encroach ajents of store on residence streets beport of committee on taxation sub mitted outlining equitable system of mdng railroad estate site city council yarteÃŸday afternoon pe*ed the gas oil and eleotrlc light com 4 nfttee to meke a thorough investigation to 4 mob whether the fact that a sadden high mlhu.6 an gas mains which endangered { loposty and lives on the west side sun Â» by wbs a development of the war of ex ftiznmiettion waged by the peoples gas toper y against an association of gaa wanness 9bw great pressure on the mains de edvyed many pressure regulating and gas qferttlg derlcee installed by the gas con 4>ili ii ' leagne filled basements with gas am jceealted tn many calls for the police ofh fire departments aidemmn bazen dftms&ded the investigation ii the citiaens of the west 6Â»de are to naÂ»u their ltres and property en sÂ«Â«gsÂ»ed hecauae the gas company is try iqg to drive a competitor out of business this council should know it and i pro ttose that we find the veaioo tor this oc mnence he said there has been considerable trouble between the gas compnny and the gas consumers league and the consumers who have installed the device for regulat ing the flow of gas have been warned re cently by the gas company to remove the regulators the blast of sunday had the effect of destroying many of thase regu lators i want to know the relation be tween the two incidents the sudden pressure on the pipes was such that the mercury in the regulators that acts to control the flow of gas through the pipes was blown out and the full volume of gas from the pipes was poured into the basements endangering the lives of every soul in such houses and the property itself causing imminent peril of asphyxiation and woree yet of explosions from contact of the gas with basement furnace fires deprived of profits i am told that the regulators deprive the gas company of many thousand dollars a month income by preventing the forcing through meters of more gas than the con sumer can legitimately uss on another sunday earlier in tha month the same kind of occurrence hap pened in evanston where the gas 1b served by the northwestern gas light & coke company a subsidiary corporation to the peoples gas light * coke com pany and where the qas ooÃŸssmam leajrne has many subscribers j2t committee was empowered to oah witnesses and take testimony of the citi zens who have been affected by the fight between the gas company and its com petitors i on a special odder of business alder mrs william courtenay who was miss virginia harned former wife and leading woman of e h sothern miss virginia harned wed several months former wife and leading woman of e h sothern surprises rlends by anrouncement of marriage stew to-rk march 24 miss virginia harned the actress has been mrs wll item courtenay for several months the announcement was made last night at a dinner in the yonug woman's home in bye n t she was formerly mrs e h sothern and for several years was soth ern's leading woman both me and mrs courtenay refuse to i-ay when tbey were married or who married them ambassador bryce bids wilson good-by capital society views with regret departure of british diplo mat and author washington marcn 24 james bryce british ambassador called at the white house this afternoon to say farewell to president wilson this is one of a series of farewell calls ambassador bryce is making a long list of warm friends he made during his stay here it is with genuine regret that washing ton society sees the ambassador depart he has a splendid knowledge of the amer ican people and was a close student of their customs as evidenced by hjs monu mental work the american common wealth the social ufa of the bryce regime was one of quiet stately dignity and mrs bryce won a reputation as a chatelaine the retiring ambassador will be sue ceedud by sir cecil arthur spring rice he will have been in residence before trat ambassador bryce stayed long enough to complete the panama canal tolls pro test woman charges two robbed her of diamonds visit home under pretense of buying gems and substitute paste stones wife says answered her ad in paper one posed as evanston real es tate dealer and the other a jewel expert a prosperous-looking well-dressed real estate dealer who said he was from evanston and a dignified gray-haired old man who snid that he was a gem ex pert from a downtown jewelry store last night turned out to be clever swindlers according to r m snyder of 3202 prairie avenue who complained to the police of the stanton avenue station the two robbed his wife of diamonds valued nt 900 last week my wife advertised in one of the morning papers that she had some diamonds for sale snyder told the po lice the nest day a well-dressed young | j man appeared nt the house and asked to see the stones he gave the name of austin parks and said he was a real es tate dealer in k vans ton wanted them examined my wife showed them to him and he examined them closely he seemed to be pleased but said he would not buy until he had had them examined by an expert he told my wife that be wanted the dia monds as a present for his wife yesterday the man giving the name of parks and a distinguished looking elderly man returned parks introduced his com panion as a gem expert from a downtown jewelry store the older of the two ex amined the diamonds shook hit head du biously and told his friend that the price was too high he put them into a wax envelope and banded them to her and she put them away discovers wife's loss when i returned home from work in the evening i asked her if she had sold her diamonds she told me of the two visitors i became suspicious and after | examining the contents of the wax en velope fonnd that paste diamond rings had been substituted according to mrs snyder who gave good descriptions of the men the younger was about fifty years old and bis com panion about sixty fakers claim to have friedmann's vaccine victims swindled in many states by men who say they know secret nkw toss march 24 information came to dr friedrlch franz friedmaun to-day from several sections of the united states that qnack physicians are claiming to have a supply of the frlednoann vae dno and are maiding tubercular victims of thousands of dollars so far as discovered the spsrious medical men are operating n detroit cleveland and erie pa and in colorado and cali fornia in cleveland a poor woman a widow â€” paid one of toe quacks 800 similar oasss have beoa reported where the re ward reaped by the taposters have ranged from 100 to 91,000 i have not given one drop of my vac cine to a private physician if i had be would not be owe to nse it said dr hrledmenu noted author lady dorothy nevill dies har beat book written at 84 told her rooollectloÃŸs of plve 3-it ish sovereigns l.omdon march 24 lady dorothy nevlll the well-known author died at her home in charles street berkley square to-day after an illness of several days lady nevlll would have reached her eighty seventh year on march 31 her last and among the best known of her books was under five keigns a book of recollec tions pubusaed in 1910 here is toll of life and property of worst storm in history of west a death toll probably reaching 350 with 15,000 000 property loss was taken by twin equinoctial tornadoes which swept through the middle west sunday night and yesterday omaha neb is the heaviest sufferer with 225 dead 500 injured and devastation totaling ten millions scores of the injured probably will die a broad section of the residential district of the city abiding place of the wealthy clr.sses was wiped out fire added to the gen eral havoc panic ensued and state and federal troops are now patrolling the wrecked districts other nebraska towns felt the death-dealing force of the wind which swept over into lowa as well as mis souri indiana Illinois michigan montana wisconsin kansas and south dakota here in Chicago the fatal force of the storm was felt the toll being five killed with 500,000 damage in milwaukee 200,000 property loss was sustained as omaha was the center of one of the tornadoes terre haute ind became the center of the other forty-five are dead from the storm w t hich hit the latter city fifteen were lost in yutan neb between twenty-five and thirty-five in surrounding nebraska towns ten in council bluffs lowa while deaths of from two to fifteen persons are reported from a score of other small towns through the nine states encompassed by the two storms the history of the middle west contains no record of storms of such violence and attended by such appalling loss of life " the storm pea d omaha archer barnes benjamin i barber scott bigelow mrs booker maria bowlers helen bleawelt henry brooks jean k cady clarence christenson two infant children of morris cooper henry copley c f daniels mr and mrs c and two small daughters davie frank davie mrs frank davie charlotte davis mrs b denguiler bam devan mrs r r dillon c w doyle john duncan george j dunean george dunn mrs ferguson field d l fields bert h fisher william fitch f vc fitz h d fitzgerald mrs f e ford sunny garrison jason l gewer lloyd givot george goodnaught mrs f g gray rose greener john grier mrs henrietta hansell george hansen mrb j g hardy mr and mrs heine miss . and two sisters heines mrs hass miss . helin mrs and baby hanson mary hamfet george hanbon a hanson george hendrickson andrew henz fred henbeman mrs a hogg mrs j p hultin miss frieda jepson jessie johnson thomas jornson mrs ella jimpson william kieme moore kramer . khosky nathan and three small daughters and in fant son larsen nels lavidge mrs and twelve-year-old son lin6ey mary manson marie m'bride mabel ma as miss newman mrs ida nichols j b norris t b norris coralie norris helen nelighs mrs niehart mrs peck a j peck mrs parks odessa peterson walter hi ley sam ryan john roessing emma saber mrs sawyer mrs e a shimer cassiu3 shaw william sherwood baby bouth charles stanley a b bullivan mrs thelma baby van dusen mrs wartzell solomon wisson c b Chicago slocombe orlo 3103 north saw yer avenue sheridan frank fond du lao wis rodgers c w fond du lac wis ywanowics thomab 1453 retf field street pecher frank lineman ralston neb kimball mrs edith winnipeg canada kimball francis moran mary said h e said mrs h e garrison jason l hansen mrs rathke mrs rathke , two young boys mote mrs edward council bluffs la benninghoff benjamin rice mrs j r rice j r x poole mrs willtam schools . continued on 6th pagf 24 column continued on 3d pago 2d column unsettled weather with . â€” â€”. â– ... rain or snow tuesday and ir\\/^.^^rtjc # probably wednesday some bange of temperatures yes jt \ v v^r 1 lowest ..â– .'.'...' 38 elf/n^ooys "* average 01.5 i hl2 1 5 t a r t your flat hunting early read the flats to rent ads in the want ad col umns oi the examiner daily and get tibe pick of the most desirable flats in Chicago or phone your ad to main 5000 /" the ssociatinn of american adver tisers lias exuminetl and certified to tit circulation of this publication the tigui^fc of circulation contained in the association's report only are guaranteed association of american advertisers xo 2300 whitehall bldg n y city

Chicago examiner vol xi no 80 a m tuesday Chicago march 25 1913 ti jfsday registered in pricf onf cfnt delivered ty carrier 350 dead in tornado property loss 15,000,000 15,000,000 225 dead 500 injured 5,000 homeless in omaha 9 states swept rescuers at work all night stillsearch ruins for bodies homes of rich demolished jthree and one-half mile strip through heart of city and seven blocks wide is razed before tornado leaps river to council bluffs iowa hundreds are saved from death by easter parade omaha neb march 24 â€” omaha chief city of nebraska lies prostrate under the spent force of the worst tornado in the history of the middle west roaring down suddenly upon the city shortly after 6 o-'clock last night the storm cut a path seven blocks wide and three and one-halt miles long through the heart of the residential district a total of 225 dead and at least 500 injured were left in the wreck-strewn path many of the injured it is feared are fatallv hurt a one hundred and fifty-two bodies have already been recovered and search of the rums i s still going on the property loss is estimated at sf 0,000.000 twelve hundred houses were wrecked in addition to five public schools and seven churches at the moment that the storm struck every light in the city was extinguished fires started all over the destroyed section torren tial rains came immediately and reduced this danger to a minimum panic ensued a trolley car with fifteen passengers was lifted from the rails and several persons injured the wind picked up the motdrmafi and set him down 200 feet awav at the child's saving institute a baby was pulled out of a window by the wind and dashed to death a quarter of a mile awav two little girls blown from the house of morris christensen were found three blocks away dead another baby was torn from the arms of its father c w walsh after the storm it was found in the lee of a broken roof uninjured order restored by troops mayor dahlman took personal command of the situation and called out all the available state troops appealing at the same time to governor moorhead for reinforcements before the roar of the tornado had died out in the distance the work of rescue had begun it continued uninterruptedly by lantern light all through the night and with the arrival to-day of the governor with additional state troops supplemented by the federal troops from fort omaha order is being rapidly restored and accurate accounting made of the extent of the damage the situation is appalling but it is believed that the authorities now have it well in hand and there remains but the work of locating all of the dead caring for the injured and clearing away the wreck age preparatory to building a committee of fifty prominent citizens is in charge of rescue work but the death list is steadily mounting as bodies are recovered the workers are federal and state stroops policemen firemen and a picked corps of volunteers the death roll will not be complete until at least another twenty four hours has passed several days probably will be required to gather the tragic details from the small towns and villages that were in the path of the tornado in iowa and nebraska more than 5,000 homeless to-night 5,000 men women and children are homeless they are being cared for in hotels and in private homes that were thrown open even before mayor dahlman issued his appeal to the citizenry to care for the stricken residence sections alone suffered the greatest loss was in a section of moderate priced homes the business heart of the city escaped entirely the tornado traveled in a northeasterly direction and first swept down on ralston a manufcaturing suburb three miles west of south omaha great beautiful homes were in a twinkling converted into dis mantled torn and wrecked nothings from the entrance of the storm into bemis park it appeared to have broadened its scope in kountze place the scene of devastation equalled that in any other â– listrict biriney street recognized as one of the prettiest thorough tares in omaha from the boulevard east to sherman avenue is ren dered impassible it struck the chx uffllts f ogjftfe at tie ejgld jaub lo the bÂ£utlrwert m * 1 council orders inquiry into gas war to end peril to lives investigation of fight between peoples company and con sumers league to follow the blowing out of regulators ericsschi is exonerated in theater collapse and plan is made to consolidate the municipal and city library branch what the council did yes terday ordered an investigation of the war between the peoples gas company anil the gas consumers league and of sudden high pressure on gag pipes bandar destroying many davioes for ving gas and endangering lives and pissed majority report of the build tpg committee on the collapse of the leaf of the home theater and rebuked alderman charles 51 thomson reject ing his minority report by a vote of hi to 19 eefhsed to censure build tag commissioner ericsson mayors park consolidation bill amend ec t adjust revenues and cant to the fcsritfijipi t,aw would ve 5417.580 i4uaoÂ«uy &> aia*iÂ«o tuoue omÂ«r combining the municipal li tmhp and the civics department of the ptjbuc library introduced by alderman long and sent to the finance commit tee alderman besfusÃŸ introduced and bad rased an ordinance strengthening the ry*b petition in preventing encroach ajents of store on residence streets beport of committee on taxation sub mitted outlining equitable system of mdng railroad estate site city council yarteÃŸday afternoon pe*ed the gas oil and eleotrlc light com 4 nfttee to meke a thorough investigation to 4 mob whether the fact that a sadden high mlhu.6 an gas mains which endangered { loposty and lives on the west side sun Â» by wbs a development of the war of ex ftiznmiettion waged by the peoples gas toper y against an association of gaa wanness 9bw great pressure on the mains de edvyed many pressure regulating and gas qferttlg derlcee installed by the gas con 4>ili ii ' leagne filled basements with gas am jceealted tn many calls for the police ofh fire departments aidemmn bazen dftms&ded the investigation ii the citiaens of the west 6Â»de are to naÂ»u their ltres and property en sÂ«Â«gsÂ»ed hecauae the gas company is try iqg to drive a competitor out of business this council should know it and i pro ttose that we find the veaioo tor this oc mnence he said there has been considerable trouble between the gas compnny and the gas consumers league and the consumers who have installed the device for regulat ing the flow of gas have been warned re cently by the gas company to remove the regulators the blast of sunday had the effect of destroying many of thase regu lators i want to know the relation be tween the two incidents the sudden pressure on the pipes was such that the mercury in the regulators that acts to control the flow of gas through the pipes was blown out and the full volume of gas from the pipes was poured into the basements endangering the lives of every soul in such houses and the property itself causing imminent peril of asphyxiation and woree yet of explosions from contact of the gas with basement furnace fires deprived of profits i am told that the regulators deprive the gas company of many thousand dollars a month income by preventing the forcing through meters of more gas than the con sumer can legitimately uss on another sunday earlier in tha month the same kind of occurrence hap pened in evanston where the gas 1b served by the northwestern gas light & coke company a subsidiary corporation to the peoples gas light * coke com pany and where the qas ooÃŸssmam leajrne has many subscribers j2t committee was empowered to oah witnesses and take testimony of the citi zens who have been affected by the fight between the gas company and its com petitors i on a special odder of business alder mrs william courtenay who was miss virginia harned former wife and leading woman of e h sothern miss virginia harned wed several months former wife and leading woman of e h sothern surprises rlends by anrouncement of marriage stew to-rk march 24 miss virginia harned the actress has been mrs wll item courtenay for several months the announcement was made last night at a dinner in the yonug woman's home in bye n t she was formerly mrs e h sothern and for several years was soth ern's leading woman both me and mrs courtenay refuse to i-ay when tbey were married or who married them ambassador bryce bids wilson good-by capital society views with regret departure of british diplo mat and author washington marcn 24 james bryce british ambassador called at the white house this afternoon to say farewell to president wilson this is one of a series of farewell calls ambassador bryce is making a long list of warm friends he made during his stay here it is with genuine regret that washing ton society sees the ambassador depart he has a splendid knowledge of the amer ican people and was a close student of their customs as evidenced by hjs monu mental work the american common wealth the social ufa of the bryce regime was one of quiet stately dignity and mrs bryce won a reputation as a chatelaine the retiring ambassador will be sue ceedud by sir cecil arthur spring rice he will have been in residence before trat ambassador bryce stayed long enough to complete the panama canal tolls pro test woman charges two robbed her of diamonds visit home under pretense of buying gems and substitute paste stones wife says answered her ad in paper one posed as evanston real es tate dealer and the other a jewel expert a prosperous-looking well-dressed real estate dealer who said he was from evanston and a dignified gray-haired old man who snid that he was a gem ex pert from a downtown jewelry store last night turned out to be clever swindlers according to r m snyder of 3202 prairie avenue who complained to the police of the stanton avenue station the two robbed his wife of diamonds valued nt 900 last week my wife advertised in one of the morning papers that she had some diamonds for sale snyder told the po lice the nest day a well-dressed young | j man appeared nt the house and asked to see the stones he gave the name of austin parks and said he was a real es tate dealer in k vans ton wanted them examined my wife showed them to him and he examined them closely he seemed to be pleased but said he would not buy until he had had them examined by an expert he told my wife that be wanted the dia monds as a present for his wife yesterday the man giving the name of parks and a distinguished looking elderly man returned parks introduced his com panion as a gem expert from a downtown jewelry store the older of the two ex amined the diamonds shook hit head du biously and told his friend that the price was too high he put them into a wax envelope and banded them to her and she put them away discovers wife's loss when i returned home from work in the evening i asked her if she had sold her diamonds she told me of the two visitors i became suspicious and after | examining the contents of the wax en velope fonnd that paste diamond rings had been substituted according to mrs snyder who gave good descriptions of the men the younger was about fifty years old and bis com panion about sixty fakers claim to have friedmann's vaccine victims swindled in many states by men who say they know secret nkw toss march 24 information came to dr friedrlch franz friedmaun to-day from several sections of the united states that qnack physicians are claiming to have a supply of the frlednoann vae dno and are maiding tubercular victims of thousands of dollars so far as discovered the spsrious medical men are operating n detroit cleveland and erie pa and in colorado and cali fornia in cleveland a poor woman a widow â€” paid one of toe quacks 800 similar oasss have beoa reported where the re ward reaped by the taposters have ranged from 100 to 91,000 i have not given one drop of my vac cine to a private physician if i had be would not be owe to nse it said dr hrledmenu noted author lady dorothy nevill dies har beat book written at 84 told her rooollectloÃŸs of plve 3-it ish sovereigns l.omdon march 24 lady dorothy nevlll the well-known author died at her home in charles street berkley square to-day after an illness of several days lady nevlll would have reached her eighty seventh year on march 31 her last and among the best known of her books was under five keigns a book of recollec tions pubusaed in 1910 here is toll of life and property of worst storm in history of west a death toll probably reaching 350 with 15,000 000 property loss was taken by twin equinoctial tornadoes which swept through the middle west sunday night and yesterday omaha neb is the heaviest sufferer with 225 dead 500 injured and devastation totaling ten millions scores of the injured probably will die a broad section of the residential district of the city abiding place of the wealthy clr.sses was wiped out fire added to the gen eral havoc panic ensued and state and federal troops are now patrolling the wrecked districts other nebraska towns felt the death-dealing force of the wind which swept over into lowa as well as mis souri indiana Illinois michigan montana wisconsin kansas and south dakota here in Chicago the fatal force of the storm was felt the toll being five killed with 500,000 damage in milwaukee 200,000 property loss was sustained as omaha was the center of one of the tornadoes terre haute ind became the center of the other forty-five are dead from the storm w t hich hit the latter city fifteen were lost in yutan neb between twenty-five and thirty-five in surrounding nebraska towns ten in council bluffs lowa while deaths of from two to fifteen persons are reported from a score of other small towns through the nine states encompassed by the two storms the history of the middle west contains no record of storms of such violence and attended by such appalling loss of life " the storm pea d omaha archer barnes benjamin i barber scott bigelow mrs booker maria bowlers helen bleawelt henry brooks jean k cady clarence christenson two infant children of morris cooper henry copley c f daniels mr and mrs c and two small daughters davie frank davie mrs frank davie charlotte davis mrs b denguiler bam devan mrs r r dillon c w doyle john duncan george j dunean george dunn mrs ferguson field d l fields bert h fisher william fitch f vc fitz h d fitzgerald mrs f e ford sunny garrison jason l gewer lloyd givot george goodnaught mrs f g gray rose greener john grier mrs henrietta hansell george hansen mrb j g hardy mr and mrs heine miss . and two sisters heines mrs hass miss . helin mrs and baby hanson mary hamfet george hanbon a hanson george hendrickson andrew henz fred henbeman mrs a hogg mrs j p hultin miss frieda jepson jessie johnson thomas jornson mrs ella jimpson william kieme moore kramer . khosky nathan and three small daughters and in fant son larsen nels lavidge mrs and twelve-year-old son lin6ey mary manson marie m'bride mabel ma as miss newman mrs ida nichols j b norris t b norris coralie norris helen nelighs mrs niehart mrs peck a j peck mrs parks odessa peterson walter hi ley sam ryan john roessing emma saber mrs sawyer mrs e a shimer cassiu3 shaw william sherwood baby bouth charles stanley a b bullivan mrs thelma baby van dusen mrs wartzell solomon wisson c b Chicago slocombe orlo 3103 north saw yer avenue sheridan frank fond du lao wis rodgers c w fond du lac wis ywanowics thomab 1453 retf field street pecher frank lineman ralston neb kimball mrs edith winnipeg canada kimball francis moran mary said h e said mrs h e garrison jason l hansen mrs rathke mrs rathke , two young boys mote mrs edward council bluffs la benninghoff benjamin rice mrs j r rice j r x poole mrs willtam schools . continued on 6th pagf 24 column continued on 3d pago 2d column unsettled weather with . â€” â€”. â– ... rain or snow tuesday and ir\\/^.^^rtjc # probably wednesday some bange of temperatures yes jt \ v v^r 1 lowest ..â– .'.'...' 38 elf/n^ooys "* average 01.5 i hl2 1 5 t a r t your flat hunting early read the flats to rent ads in the want ad col umns oi the examiner daily and get tibe pick of the most desirable flats in Chicago or phone your ad to main 5000 /" the ssociatinn of american adver tisers lias exuminetl and certified to tit circulation of this publication the tigui^fc of circulation contained in the association's report only are guaranteed association of american advertisers xo 2300 whitehall bldg n y city